The Guerrilla Girls are an anonymous group of feminist artists and activists who formed in 1985 to combat sexism and racism within the art world. This source is an interview with the Guerrilla Girls, taken from their 1995 book, Confessions of the Guerrilla Girls. In the interview, the group discusses their origins, tactics, impact, view on the art world, and future plans.
Guerilla Girls
Guerrilla Girls on the Art of Creative Complaining (2018)
2011-Present, Date, Defining the Enemy, Disruptive Spaces, Institutions, Patriarchy, Subjectives of Refusal, WomenThe Guerrilla Girls are an anonymous collective of feminist artists who combat sexism and racism within the art world. Founded in 1985, the group uses culture-jamming tactics and mass media to expose discrimination. This document is an interview with Frida Khalo, a founding member of the Guerrilla Girls collective. Khalo describes the various ways in which the Guerrilla Girls engage in resistance through creative activism, using provocative art and statistics to challenge discrimination and corruption in the art world.
Do women have to be naked to get into the Met. Museum? by the Guerilla Girls (1989)
1946-1989, Date, Defining the Enemy, PatriarchyThis poster was created by the Guerilla Girls as a way to disrupt our passive consumption of art and our implicit acceptance of patriarchal values that determine the legitimacy of art.